In the case of a Defender bullbar, I'd agree. The Defender doesn't require any relocation, styling is easy, no airbags and the exact same design can be used for many, many version of the car, and there are a lot of people wanting it so sales volumes are high. None of those factors apply to the D3 or similar vehicles which are harder to design for and far, far lower volumes. That's why you struggle to find modern Range Rover accessories; if the manufacturers thought they could make a buck there they would, but the demand doesn't exist.
Draw one up on Autocad, e-mail it to a Chinese manufacturer, sell a few here, and watch the locals cut the fat out of their price.
URSUSMAJOR
This thread has turned into a demonstration of the hidden costs of regulation. I suggest that it is likely that the additional costs imposed by the regulation of bullbars substantially outweight the benefits - and the same probably applies to a whole range of regulation. Particularly annoying when it applies to a mainly rural device that is regulated for the benefit of city dwellers, as is so often the case.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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